More than a year removed from his final season with Colin Kaepernick and the 49ers, the team that drafted him out of college in 2009, Raiders wide receiver Michael Crabtree isn’t done saying how he really feels about his former quarterback.

Asked after Sunday’s 17-10 win over the Titans if he approved of two of his Raiders teammates’ decisions to follow Kaepernick’s lead and raise their fists in protest during the national anthem, Crabtree offered a curt reply.

If his answer didn’t already paint him as the antithesis of Kaepernick’s movement to use sports as a platform to advocate social change, Crabtree also distanced himself from Kaepernick the person in his next response.

“I’ve let it be known I don’t have anything to do with him,” Crabtree said. “I’m a Raider.”

This isn’t the first time Crabtree has taken a shot at his ex-teammate, who led the San Francisco offense for three seasons that included a a run to the Super Bowl after the 2012 season — a loss to the Ravens — and an appearance in the 2013 NFC Championship game — a loss to the Seahawks — before an 8-8 season in 2014, Crabtree’s last with the team.

In the week leading up to his 2015 debut with the Raiders, after signing with the team as a free agent in the offseason, Crabtree gave several reasons for his decision to reject more money in San Francisco for a fresh start in silver and black. The one that stood out was his opinion of the 49ers’ quarterback situation.

“I needed new scenery,” Crabtree told the San Francisco Chronicle. “It wasn’t for me. I needed a quarterback that can deliver the ball, and that was hungry like I was.”

It took until February for Crabtree to expand on his criticism of Kaepernick’s passing abilities, but when he finally opened up to Fox Sports 1 about his “relationship” with Kaepernick, he made his point loud and clear.

“Nah, I haven’t talked to him since I left,” Crabtree said. “I hope he gets in those books and watch that film and know what he’s doing out there.”

Whatever the motivation behind Crabtree’s decision not to protest the anthem, he just made the Kaepernick question a lot more personal.